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Antibiotic prescribing trends in patients with upper respiratory tract infections reporting to tertiary care hospitals of Lahore

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dc.contributor.author Ullah, Kalim
dc.contributor.author Baloch, Marvi
dc.contributor.author Ali Khan, Ayaz
dc.contributor.author Saeed, Hamid
dc.contributor.author Islam, Muhammad
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-14T05:29:05Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-14T05:29:05Z
dc.date.issued 2020-07-16
dc.identifier.citation Ullah, K., Baloch, M., Khan, A. A., Saeed, H., & Islam, M. (2020). Antibiotic prescribing trends in patients with upper respiratory tract infections reporting to tertiary care hospitals of Lahore. Pak. J. Pharm. Sci, 33(4), 1879-1888. en_US
dc.identifier.issn 1011-601X
dc.identifier.uri http://142.54.178.187:9060/xmlui/handle/123456789/13164
dc.description.abstract To estimate the antibiotic utilization and treatment compliance in URTIs reported to tertiary care hospitals of Lahore. A cross-sectional study was conducted by including 423 prescription files from public and private hospitals of Lahore. Descriptive statistics were used to estimate percentage frequencies. The reporting frequency of URTIs, tonsillitis, pharyngitis and otitis media, was higher in public hospitals (JH; 27.4%, LGH; 25.8%) compared to private (NHMC;16.3%, DHMC;15.1%) hospitals in patients aged 21–40 years. Patients aged 18–40 years (59%) received most antibiotics. Broad spectrum antibiotics (95%) were prescribed in both public (JH; 27.4%, LGH;25.9%) and private hospitals (NHMC;16.3%, DHMC;14.8%) - co-amoxiclave (30%) in penicillin class, ceftriaxone (15.4%) and cefixime (11.6%) in cephalosporin class, levofloxacin (11.3%) in quinolone class and clarithromycin (10.4%) in macrolide class, in tonsillitis, pharyngitis and otitis media. The diagnosis that received most antibiotics included tonsillitis (30%), pharyngitis (29.1%) and otitis media (11.1%). Superior treatment compliance was observed in public hospitals compared to private hospitals. The highest treatment non-compliance was observed in laryngitis (36.4%), otitis media (34%) and pharyngitis (26%). 1st line and over all treatment compliance was superior in public hospitals - sore throat, tonsillitis, sinusitis, otitis media and pharyngitis received the most appropriate choices. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Karachi:Pakistan Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, university of Karachi. en_US
dc.subject URTIs en_US
dc.subject antibiotic consumption en_US
dc.subject cephalosporin en_US
dc.subject quinolones en_US
dc.subject macrolides en_US
dc.subject co-amoxiclave en_US
dc.subject Lahore en_US
dc.subject tertiary hospitals en_US
dc.title Antibiotic prescribing trends in patients with upper respiratory tract infections reporting to tertiary care hospitals of Lahore en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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